Veggies Round 1
March 26th, 2010
More than half of my vegetable garden is planted… how about you?
Cool-season crops tolerate frosts. End of March is normally not too soon to plant onion sets, cabbage and broccoli plants, and seeds of radishes, spinach, peas, lettuce and mesclun.
I also planted eyes of ‘Red Norland’ potatoes and even two tomato plants under Wall-o-Water plant protectors. Wall-o-Waters are circular plastic gizmos with foot-and-a-half-tall cylinders that you fill with water. Place it around a tomato, and it makes a little teepee-like portable greenhouse. The water warms during the day and keeps the plants above freezing at night inside.
I’ve used Wall-o-Waters for 20 years and have never lost a tomato yet, even though I set the plants out April 1 or sooner. You don’t get fruits 6 weeks early, but the protection usually gives me ripe tomatoes by late June. I start my own early tomatoes under lights in the basement in late January and speed ripening by using cherry tomatoes and a very early variety (i.e. ‘Early Girl’ or ‘Ultimate Opener’) for my Wall-o-Water starts.
Garden centers usually carry Wall-o-Waters (at least some of the time), and they’re also available through most seed and garden-product catalogs. Here’s a link to Planet Natural’s page listing them at three for $8.95: http://www.planetnatural.com/site/wallo-water.html.
In the next two weeks, I’ll be planting seeds of red beets and carrots plus transplants of cauliflower, radicchio, chard and leeks that I started inside under the basement plant lights. Round 3 happens in mid-May when I plant the main-season tomatoes plus peppers, hot peppers, cucumbers, melons, beans and squash.
There was a time not long ago when just about everybody had vegetable gardens. In the last 20 years, though, they’ve become almost rare around here. If I see them in one out of every 10 yards, that’d be pushing it.
It’s been heartening to see veggies making a comeback. Lots of newbies gave it a shot last year, and I’m getting even more questions from people interested in starting edible gardens this year. I don’t think this was a 1-year fad. Hopefully it’s not just a 2-year fad either.
Now’s a good time to dig up some of the lawn and put it to better use. Here’s a link to a past column that has some basic, get-started veggie info: https://georgeweigel.net/favorite-past-garden-columns/edibles/vegetable-gardening-rebirth.
I just ran into a retired Hershey fellow who’s just started a business in which he’ll come out to your house and dig and install a raised-bed garden for you. His name is Jerry McNeal, and here’s a link for more info on his service: http://inadaygardens.com. The cost is $165 for a 4-by-4 garden and $259 for a 4-by-8, including materials, soil, labor and some seeds to get you started.
Haven’t seen any groundhogs yet…